Seventy-Second Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. . ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints, "Ahoy, There! Have You Got Some Co-Signers Who'll Guarantee That You'll Return This Promptly?" 4yf ~r ... - -/K ~~ . SATURDAY, MARCH 24, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: JUDITH OPPENHEIM Reapportionment: Two Views Population Only ... Random Districts .. . HiE 1960 CENSUS gave Michigan one more congressman. The Beadle reapportionment bill, providing the new district for him to run in, now lies/on the governor's desk, awaiting his action. It will be vetoed. Thus, in November, Michigan will have a congressman-at-large. Reapportionment of congressional districts should be a simple thing. The law in the matter is quite clear-the state shall be split up into districts, each having populations as nearly equal as possible. There is no mention of gerrymandering, rotten boroughs, partisan composition, rural- city splits, or any of the other age-old saws that opponents of apportionment plans always use. THEREFORE, the law can be interpreted to mean that as long as the population is divided as equally as possible, other consider- ations are unimportant, regardless of the pas- sion with which they are debated. Michigan's present apportionment, due to population shifts in the last decade, is quite inequitable. One congressman in Oakland County represents 690,000 people, while a col- league in the Upper Peninsula has only 150,000 constituents (the smallest district in the na- tion, incidentally). The Beadle bill, however, does little to correct this. Instead it carves the new district out of the corners of a few old ones. For the most part, the state's apportionment is unchanged. UNFORTUNATELY, this situation is largely a result of political pressure. The incum-, bent Republican congressmen, who outnumber their Democratic counterparts 11 to 7, prac- tically ordered the GOP-dominated Legislature to leave the present apportionment alone. But the Democrats, through the Governor's veto, are determined to block any plan which would not make the new seat Democratic. Somehow the people lost out, and it seems to be due to the selfish interests of the GOP Washington delegation. The Lansing Repub- licans had many proposed district plans sub- mitted to them. Among those plans were several that saved the seats of every incumbent while apportioning strictly by population and according to the law. These plans were blocked at the insistence of the Washington GOP, however, for they not only wanted their seats saved, but they wanted their entire districts unchanged. T HIS INEQUITY could have been corrected had the Republicans cared one whit about the law. But they chose, instead, the easy way out. They passed a plan they knew would draw the Governor's veto, thus leaving their precious districts unchanged for the GOP con- gressmen. Thus a congressman-at-large is created- temporarily at least. Which party will get the seat is most unclear. If George Romney is able to run as strong as his supporters pre- dict, then perhaps he can carry the rest of the GOP statewide candidates in with him, reversing the Democratic trend which has pre- vailed for the last 10 years. The job itself will be somewhat precarious. Its ,tenure will depend upon how long it takes the Legislature to come up with a satisfactory apportionment, at which time it will be erased, And this leaves the incumbent out in the cold. But more important than that, this political manuevering breaks faith with the people, for it is a dereliction of duty on the part of the Legislature. It also perpetuates the Washington congress- men,. who. are apparently terrified- at the thought of having to appeal to any new voters. And if these congressmen are so afraid to have districts altered a bit, they must not be very good representatives of the people. THERE IS only one way to settle the issue, The law must be amended to state that reapportionment must be accomplished every 10 years, regardless of whether a state gains or loses seats, in order to keep the population division as equal as possible. If the Legislature is unable to do so, then some third party will have to be delegated to do it for them until such time as they are once again able to do it themselves. The people are entitled by law to equal representation, and legislators and governors have no more right to break that law than anyonle else. Above all, the selfish interests of incumbent congressmen should not be a con- sideration. Good congressmen, you see, are prepared to run on their records, which doesn't say much for Michigan's Washington delegation. --MICHAEL HARRAH Editorial Staff JOHN ROBERTS. Editor FAIR REPRESENTATION depends on more factors than equal division by population. The belief that representation on the basis of population alone is sufficient is the fallacy of present discussion of re-apportionment. This fallacy has led to open gerrymandering, creating over-representation of a political minority controlled by cheap politicians whose interests are nothing like those of the people of the district they are supposed to represent. Indeed, equal numbers of people in each district are essential. However, this has no meaning unless the boundaries are chosen in such a way that the political composition of the district is randomly determined. Politicians often hide behind the cloak of apportionment by equal population and create a situation in which a political minority can keep control of an uninformed electorate. Such is the situation in the state of Michi- gan, and the political minority which has duped the people is the Republican party. Here is a hypothetical example which demon- strates how the people may be duped by a political minority: LET'S SAY the state Republican party wants to re-apportion Michigan's representatives to Congress. They realize that, at present, many of their own representatives are from rural areas which have not grown as fast as the large cities. These areas, which are pre- dominantly Republican, are over-represented. Also they know that the Governor and both Senators are Democrats and are the only state-wide elected officials. The people in the state are aware of the obvious inequities and are clamouring for fair representation. The good Republicans broach a solution. The state is to be re-apportioned according to a population basis. All hail the Republican party. The Republican majority, in the Legislature passes the bill, and the public lies dormant, ap- peased by the fact that the state has been indeed "fairly represented." Funny thing, the Republicans received more seats in the house of representatives the next year. THE DEMOCRATIC party is confused. They remember that when the districts were formed they were to be composed of an equal number of people. They remember that the districts were so arranged in Detroit that four Democratic congressmen would retain their seats. They remember agreeing with the Re- publican politicians that this was indeed a good idea as not only would there be equal rep- resentation, but the seats of all the hard working congressmen would be carefully pre- served by appropriate choice of district boun- daries. So what if one district is 90 miles wide and runs from the upper peninsula down to the city of Detroit. What has happened is clear. The Republicans have drawn the district boundaries so that they have guaranteed their continued majority representation even though a minority of the people are Republican. The Democrats accepted the plan because of personal pressures to re- tain their existing seats. Indeed, the Democrats were naive enough to let the Republicans present a plan in which most Democratic seats are "judiciously" preserved, as well as the Republican control. THE FOUNDERS of our country believed that if 60 per cent of the population has a par- ticular view and 40 per cent another, the ratio of representatives holding that view in a legislative body should be 60-40 not 80-20. They believed this could be achieved by breaking an area up into small population units in areas of approximately equal size. It was hoped that by making the areas small enough and due to the unbiased choice of district boundaries the majority-minority ratio would be fairly represented in the legislative body. It was obvious to the framers of our constitu- tion that the key to the whole matter of attain- ing fair representation is the unbiased choice of district boundaries. Equality of population was never considered sufficient. When districts boundaries are chosen in a random manner, chance guarantees fair representation. THIS PRINCIPLE has been slowly lost over the years due to increased political maneu- vering. Indeed, the problem today is not just one of a forgotten principle. The legislators of this state are toying with the destruction of some- thing we believe in. For if the people are not fairly represented we are creating a situation which will lead to minority suppression and the ultimate corruption of democracy. If we do not claim our right to be represent- ed, we give up other freedoms we have fought so long to maintain. THE STATE of Michigan has a last chance to speak for itself. It is framing a new constitution and thereby initiating a new poli- AT THE MICHIGAN: Farce-and-B loodshed "SERGEANTS THREE" suffers from a curious imbalance. It stare Frank Sinatra, Peter Lawford, Sammy Davis Jr., and the rest of the Hollywood Clan, better known as the Washington D. C. away from Washington D. C. From the ads and the coming attractions, it promises to be an enjoyable romp in Union blue. It is, in part. There are several hilarious moments in the picture, the best being when Dean Martin (as Sergeant Dale) casually strides up alone to the head of 50-odd rioting Indians, who are running around brandishing hatchets, and-sans gun-proclaims: "In the name of the President of the United States, Ulysses S. Grant, you're all under arrest." Sergeants Dale, Merry and Barrett (Martin, Sinatra, Lawford), three grown-up East Side kids if there ever were ones, are sent out on a mission to rout out and destroy the Ghost Dancers, a renegade band of Indians. The Ghost Dancers, whom Dale eventually finds himself in the middle of, are dedicated to wiping out the white man and bringing back the days of the hunting ground. BUT THE IMBALANCE intrudes itself constantly, and we cannot believe that all the killing and blood-some of it literally as bad (or good, depending on how you look at it) as "Ben Hur"-is to be regarded as just part of the general fun. For instance, Sammy Davis, a freed slave who tags along with the mission, gets an arrow in such a way and at such a moment that it shocks and throws the whole picture out of kilter, no matter how much we tell ourselves that this is supposed to be a farce. Several other disconcerting things like this are spread throughout the film. It tries too much to be a melodrama AND a farce-comedy AND a cavalry and Indians picture. It is funny when it is a farce, but it loses that quality when it switches to melodrama. It is touching, in its own way, when it concentrates on melodrama, but quickly drops that. It's too bad they couldn't make up their minds. -Steven Hendel AT CHURCH: God's Work Undone THE WRATH OF GOD failed to descend upon The Unitarian Church last night as the hypothetical curtain rose at the Ann Arbor premiere of Paul Goodman's satire on the world's best seller. Never performed by a professional group since it was published in 1945, and destined never to be in the forseeable future, "Jonah" was given the treatment it deserved last night by the unprofessional, undramatical and thoroughly entertaining John Barton Wolgamot Society Players. "Jonah" shares the plight of the more serious literary works by social commentator Goodman-the Western world is not yet ready for a play which poignantly and laughingly thrashes out at those who still close their sin-ridden day with "now I lay me down to sleep." SPECIFICALLY, Goodman chose the tale of Jonah and the Whale in a sort of "what is Jonah really like?" investigation. Jonah is a fat little Jewish tailor on, intimate grounds with the "Ambassador of an Absolute Power" who is rather dismayed with the trials and tribulations that fate has cast upon an unwilling prophet. He never knows for sure whether his doom-filled prophesies will come true and thus he never knows whether he will he held in contempt by the few survivors or made into a laughing stock and a liar by the rejoicing survivors. Either way, he can't win. Thus Jonah is reluctant to warn the people of Ninevah that in Forty Days and Forty Nights their city will be destroyed and its is in attempting to avoid this divinely-inspired duty that he modifies his itinerary and is caught in the storm at sea which tosses him into the mouth of a sensitive and belching whale. * * * * JONAH, effectively portrayed by yiddish-accented William P. Kenney, uninspired by his sometimes Mumford High School-accented wife (Gail Roggin), -wends his way through the Biblical plot and alternately has to face An Angel of the Lord (George Kennedy), the Captain of a Ship (Prof. Donald Hall), the Judge (Prof. Marvin Felheim), The King of Nineveh (Prof. O. L. Chavarria-Aguilar) along with a bevy of campus beauties, spies, a Sensitive Man, An Atrocious Worm and an Archetype Ninevite. Interspersed are garden and steam- room variety Jewish jokes. And with slight departure from the original, the entire potpourri blessed in the end and the multitudes of Nineveh, "repentent," but drunk, are allowed to go on with their inner-directed society of devout acrobatics, carnal experimentation and affluent pleasure much to the audible delight of all onlookers-believers and skeptics alike. -Harvey Molotch ° WELENSKY'S FEDERATION: Winds of Change in Africa (EDITOR'S NOTE-The writer of this interpretive is an international student from Nigeria.) By ISAAC ADALEMO Daily Staff Writer THE RECENT policy of Sir Roy Welensky of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland is bound to add to the troubles in Africa. He has made clear his intention to perpetuate the rule of the white minority in Central Africa by keeping intact the arbitrarily im- posed Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland. Welensky's reason for sticking to this policy is to prevent another Congo situation. He does not rea- lize, however, that his policy may give rise to another Algerian situa- tion. His ill-boding statement to the British government is as threatening as the determined at- tempt of the OAS to forestall Al- gerian independence at the ex- pense of human lives : "To protect the Federation," he threatened, "I mean going the whole hog ... I would take every step necessary to carry out the policy I wish to carry out and use force if necessary." WHAT WORRIES people is that minority rule is directly opposite to the democracy which Welen- sky claims to be practising. The ease with which these settlers in Africa threaten to sacrifice human lives for their own ends-the prin- ciple of "the end justifies the means"_won't do. Their policy is creating trouble in Africa and is the chief factor breaking up the continent. How- ever, it also constitutes a unifying factor-unifying the oppressed Af- fricans into a force which will eventually oust imperialism in all its forms. Instead of trying to continue with the exploitation of these people, the wisest line ofdaction any white minority could take would be to train them gradually to take over the administration of their respective countries. This would create an atmosphere of friendly feeling and prevent troubles more effectively than forced rule. THE FEDERATION of Rhodesia and Nyasaland and the attempt to perpetuate it against the wishes of the people is one example of the wrong way to handle the African situation. Nyasaland, the smallest of the three states in the doomed federa- tion, wants to quit. Northern Rho- desia may soon have an autono- mous government; leaving South- ern Rhodesia alone. In each of these states, there is an African majority: Nyasaland has 2.8 mil- lion Africanssand 21,400 whites; Northern Rhodesia has 2.3 million Africans and 84,900 whites; South- ern Rhodesia has 2.8 million Afri- cans and 243,800 whites. THE ARGUMENT here is not that a grouping of small states into federations is against the African political sense. But such a federation against the wish of the people is revolting. A country may feel that she can go it alone. There is no point in forcing such a country into a federation. The creation and con- tinuance of a federation should be based on willing consent. This is the point Welensky fails to consider. He is still under the illusion that Africans cannot rule themselves effectively and tnere- fore needyto be kept willy-nilly under a system of semi-apartheid, with the white minority ruling the black majority. Of course they cannot rule themselves as long as people like Welensky keep sub- jecting them to minoiity rules. * * * BUT THIS does not mean ac- ceptance of Roy Welensky's con- tention. Before the infiltration of Euro- pean culture into Africa there had been stable and well organized kingdoms in Africa. The Yoruba, Benin, Ghana and Mali kingdoms in the West were established under the most refined democratic prin- ciples ever evolved. Each of them possessed a sophisticated culture long admired by Europeans them- selves. The East African cultures had their glories. But when the Euro- peans came in with the slave trade and the gradual imposition of a new culture by force of con- quest and domination these gov- ernments collapsed and the cul- tures became corrupted. * * * THE NEW immigrants were too interested in exploitation and did not bother to introduce the new culture which they had brought with them in the proper manner. To train the Africans to be able to take up the newly imposed po- litical system and therefore rule themselves would mean jeopardiz- ing their chances of exploitation. It was not expected that a time is coming when these "uncivilized" people will become "civilized" and lay claim to their rights. And when that time came it met the exploiters unprepared to handle the situation properly. This sometimes resulted in their being thrown out, leaving the poorly prepared Africans to handle the situation as best they could. The creation of a friendly atmosphere on the grounds previously sug- gested would have prevented the troubles in Africa today. IF PEOPLE like Roy Welensky desire to live in Africa and enjoyj her natural wealth-not by any means fully exploited' yet- why can't they forget all about color? Why can't they forget all the past glories connected with domina- tion? They should settle down without an aim of exploiting and, dominating. They should attempt to help Africans build up Africa rather than help ruin it. The greatest mistake of all whites in Africa-in Algeria, East Africa, the Rhodesias, and the Republic of South Africa-is that they still retain the past associa- tion with the colonial overlords. They overlook the fact that a wind of change is blowing across Africa. In order not to be blown off course, they should move along with the change. It will be better for Africa and for the whole world if Welensky would drop his plan of preventing the British government from granting independence to' nations that deserve it. Otherwise, he will create a new Algeria. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Ford Pledges' Best Effort To the Editor: THIS LETTER is addressed to anyone who supported me dur- ing this election. I regret that I am not articulate enough to voice my genuine appreciation-simply saying "thank you" is so inade- quate. However, actions do speak louder than words. . Therefore, I will endeavor dur- ing my term on Council to prove that your faith was not misplaced. I urge all who have any questions, complaints, misconceptions, con- structive proposals or general problem areas to be clarified about the Council to discuss them with me. Communication'must be in- creased if your voice is to be heard. I believe this Council can be strong. It can be effective. It can be worthwhile. I will work to achieve this, and I hope you will help me to make it so. Presently, all I can say is thank you to my friends, the other candidates, Council members, and the many whom I have not met who have helped me so much during this campaign. -Katherine Ford, '64 Mockery ... To the Editor: IT SEEMS to me that repetition of the embarrassment and ill- feeling surounding the disqualifi- cations of Stanley Lubin and Katherine Ford from the recent SGC election could be avoided if the SGC Rules and Credentials Committee adopted the policy of accepting no new challenges of candidates' petitions after the Drintingt of the ballots. occur, then next time the filing date should be somewhat earlier. Once a candidate's name is on the ballot, he should be disqual- ified only for malpractices in his actual campaign. Again, there should be a deadline, say some three days after the balloting, af- ter which no new challenges of a candidate's campaign practices will be accepted. Under the present policy, it seems that a candidate can be disqualified for an illegal peti- tion several months after he has taken office. What mockery this makes of the election! Michael Margolis, Grad Disclaimer . .. To the Editor: "THE OPINIONS expressed on Headlines and Bylines are those of the commentators, and do not necessarily reflect the views of either WCBN or its advertisers." This statement is read by one of us at the close of every edition of the editorial show given such kind accord in The Daily of Thurs- day, March 22. Yet, The Daily seemingly oblivious of this fact, chose to use a misleading headline on its story concerning our show reading "WCBNSeeks New Con- test." In addition, while Ostling's story accurately reflected our opinion at 7:30 Wednesday even- ing, it did not reflect our opinion when The Daily hit the streets Thursday morning. The Daily doesn't seem to realize the fact that opinions expressed over the air on subjects which are rapidiy changing do not remain static. We are still of the opinion that the election was handled with cil and the campus which re- sulted from factual errors in The Daily, and a lack of communica- tions from the Council. We feel it should be the right of every voter to decide whether the actions of a candidate will affect the way in which a stu- dent votes. It does not seem to be the province of the Committee on Credentials and Rules to de- cide whether or not the voters should be allowed to know the nature of any given violation. This is our opinion at the pres- ent time. This opinion is subject to change in view of new facts which may come to light in the future. -Harry L. Doerr, '64 -Robert W. Price, '64 WCBN Editorial Directors Starvtion... To the Editor: VOICES, FACES and tons of letters containing joy, happi- ness and even hopes for the final breakdown of Cuba due to the shortage of food can be heard, seen or read in these days when Castro announced publicly that food rationing had to be imposed in Cuba for a while until they can overcome this shortage. By reading or listening to these outbursts of euforia, a very simple question comes to my mind. Where are those who claim to be human- itarians? Where are those con- cerned with the greatest ideals about human existence and wel- fare? Then I go on wondering whether people because of having a different government and ideol- ogy not suitable to others, do not have the right to fulfill every DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be Events American Musicale: Alpha Chapter of Sigma Alpha Iota will present an Amer-